Why Is India Hundreds of Times More Responsive to this Website’s Outreach Than Other Countries?
January 29, 2026
This entire discussion is intended to explore a single question raised by our outreach data and AI analyses: whether the website’s discussion of “Triune Consciousness” underlying evolution—since it begins and ends by drawing on ancient Indian cultural contributions—helps explain the strong receptivity and engagement we see from India.
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​The seminal outline for “Triune Consciousness” is hidden within the Hindu-Arabic numbering system which traces its Indian origin back to around 300 BCE. Likewise, this website’s concluding manifestation of Triune Consciousness is the ancient Hindu meditative model incorporating the universal AUM (Om) chant which may have originated before 1000 BCE.
Triune Consciousness within the Hindu-Arabic Numbering System
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Since the Hindu-Arabic numbering system has played a uniquely enabling role in the mathematics associated with the physics underlying the universe’s evolution, we began our search for the hidden Triune Consciousness by examining the attributes of this system. First, it is the most efficient numbering system as it requires the fewest symbols to represent numbers. Second, by being based on ten digits (0 to 9), and thus a decimal system, its applicability is unusually flexible. These innovations marked a radical departure from earlier systems such as Roman numerals and Babylonian counting, which lacked both positional value and a symbol for zero. This new numbering system spread from India to the Arab world between the 7th and 10th centuries CE through trade, scholarship, and cultural exchange. Arab mathematicians adopted and further developed the system, which led to the system’s eventual introduction to Europe. Today, the Hindu-Arabic numbering system is universally used and remains a cornerstone of mathematical education, science, technology, and international trade. The Indian role in its discovery and development stands as a testament to the enduring influence of its ancient scholarship and innovation.
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While other numbering systems can be based on increments of 10, only the Hindu-Arabic system positions its digits in such a way that each multi-digit number can be added and re-added to form a repeating circular pattern of single-digit sums or digital roots (i.e., 1 through 9), as shown below in Figure 1 which was taken from the website’s Triune Consciousness discussion. For example, the multiple-digit numbers 10, 11 and 12 can be summed to 1+0=1, 11 to 1+1=2, 12 to 1+2=3, and so forth. As a result, when Hindu-Arabic numbers are arranged sequentially around a set of concentric circles, the single-digit sums or digital roots of each number form a spoke-like pattern.​​

Figure 1.Consecutive Hindu-Arabic numbers reduce to concentric circles of nine single-digit sums or digital roots
In other words, any multi-digit Hindu-Arabic number (that is not an endlessly repeating irrational decimal) can be expressed as one of the nine single-digit sums or digital roots, (i.e. 1-9) that forms the innermost circle of Figure 1.
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Moreover, by expressing all multi-digit numbers as single-digital roots, we can check basic arithmetic relationships between any two multi-digit Hindu-Arabic numbers involving addition, subtraction, division, and multiplication, through a simple process now referred to as the digital root method, formerly called casting out nines. As a result, the nine single-digit sums or digital roots making up the innermost circle of Figure 1 can effectively represent the entire Hindu-Arabic numbering system for basic arithmetic purposes.
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3 as the “interactive enabler”
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Importantly, of the nine digital roots (i.e., 1-9) forming the inner circle of Figure 1, as well as the outer circle of Figure 2 below, 3 can only divide into 3, 6 and 9 and produce single-digit equivalent answers or digital root quotients and thus avoid resulting in endlessly repeating decimals. Moreover, because 3, 6 and 9 are multiples of 3, they also cannot divide into any of the other six digits and produce a single-digit equivalent or digital root answer. This “interactive” divisional relationship is graphically depicted as the 3, 6 and 9 triangle in Figure 2. Said another way, as the “interactive” common divisor of only 3, 6 and 9, 3 “enables” their differentiating indivisibility into the other six digits. Because of this “unifying” differentiation of the 3, 6 and 9 triangle, it is subsequently referred to as the “3, 6 & 9 Triune” shown in Figure 2, where 3 is appropriately labeled as the “interactive enabler”.

Figure 2. The “3, 6 & 9 Triune” hidden within the Hindu-Arabic numbering system
6 as the source of “integrative guidance”
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Like 3, 6 is a member of the “3, 6 & 9 Triune”, but six also represents the number of digits that are not part of the “3, 6 & 9 Triune” (i.e., 1, 2, 4, 5, 7 and 8) in the circle of nine single-digit equivalents. Thus, it falls upon 6 to provide “guidance” for “integrating” the six digits outside the “3, 6 & 9 Triune” (i.e., the non-triune digits) with the “3, 6 & 9 Triune”, but consistent with, or not violating, the role of the “interactive enabler” which means emulating the “3, 6 &9 Triune”. Appropriately, 6 is labeled as the source of “integrative guidance” in Figure 2.
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9 as the “encompassing unifier”
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As the largest of the nine digits (1-9), 9 can be viewed as “encompassing” the mathematical totality of all the digits. This means that the single-digit equivalent of the totality of all conceivable numbers (i.e., its digital root) cannot exceed 9. Said another way, it is impossible to conceive of a multi-digit number so large that its digital root is greater than 9.
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Since 9's totality “encompassingly unifies” all Hindu-Arabic numbers, 9 is referred to as the “encompassing unifier” in Figure 2, thereby completing the “3, 6 & 9 Triune” within the context of the nine digital roots that are capable of representing all Hindu-Arabic numbers for basic arithmetic purposes and thereby provide a basic outline for Triune Consciousness.
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Triune Consciousness in the Hindu Meditative Framework
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While the Hindu-Arabic numbering system provides the seminal outline for Triune Consciousness, the Hindu meditative framework provides one of the most evolved manifestations of Triune Consciousness.
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Specifically in the Hindu tradition, the universal AUM (Om) chant is made up of three distinct sound components: Aa, Uu and Mm which in turn represents the divine Trimurti, namely, Vishnu, Shiva and Brahma, respectively. When this Trimurti is expressed in terms of the "3, 6 & 9 Triune":
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Vishnu, as the preserver of the universe and cosmos, could be viewed as the "interactive enabler" at the Triune's 3 position;
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Brahma, as the creator of the universe, could be viewed as the source of "integrative guidance" at the Triune's 6 position; and
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Shiva, as the destroyer leading to rejuvenation, could be viewed as the "encompassing unifier" at the Triune's 9 position, as shown in Figure 3.

Figure 3. The Hindu Trimurti expressed within the context of Triune Consciousness
The Hindu tradition also associates the AUM chant with three states of consciousness, namely, A (Akaar) the waking state, U (Ukaar) the dream state, and M (Makaar) the deep sleep state. Likewise, these three could best be assigned to 9, 3, and 6, respectively, in the triune model. Moreover, when unified these three states transcend to a state of pure Triune Consciousness and ultimate awareness.
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In sum, the key question is whether the website’s focus on Triune Consciousness—deeply embedded in Indian mathematical and meditative traditions—accounts for its unusual resonance with Indian cultural heritage and the resulting surge in engagement from India.